Deporting the “la” out of LA

by Thomas Gill on July 29, 2008 in Blog, Voices from New Orleans

Following Hurricane Katrina, the message on Spanish radio stations throughout the southern U.S. was clear: “There is plenty of work on the Gulf Coast. Please go there and be a part of the rebuilding.” Also, on September 6, 2005, just days after the storm hit, the Department of Homeland Security announced that it was suspending certain labor regulations for a 45-day period. Employers would not be required to confirm the identity of employees. DHS then lifted wage restrictions for two months in order to allow contractors to pay lower wages to the workers that would rebuild the city.  The result was an influx of Latino workers needed to help rebuild New Orleans. It is widely accepted in New Orleans today that Latinos did a substantial amount of the reconstruction that enabled later flows of people to return to the city .

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The UNIFIL Indian Battalion wins hearts and minds in southern Lebanon

by Sharad Venkat on July 29, 2008 in Blog, Live from Beirut

I spent the day with the UN Indian Battalion, INDBATT, last week and wrote a story about the social services they provide to the surrounding communities. It was a great experience, 1. because I was able to see how an army can effectively forge ties and build trust with a local population, 2. because they took me on a tour of the disputed Blue Line and let me look out at the Shebba Farms from one of their observation posts, and 3. because they were extremely gracious, and treated me very well.

Printed on July 26, 2008, in the Daily Star.

IBL AL SAQI: Chief veterinarian for the Indian UN battalion (INDBATT) Lieutenant Colonel Satvir Singh, in full uniform, lowers himself on one knee on the side of the road in the southern Lebanese town of Shebaa. He reaches under the goat as the shepherd’s wife holds it by the scruff of its neck and pulls the heaving udder toward him.

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The Plot Thickens- A sit down with Kantar

by Sharad Venkat on July 21, 2008 in Blog, Live from Beirut

I’ve been intrigued by the details surrounding what happened almost 30 years ago when Samir Kantar slipped into Israel and committed the most heinous of crimes. I still believe he did it, but this article provides an insight into the man, and into the psyche of the conflict that was occurring back when the middle east met the wild west.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/jul/19/lebanon.israelandthepalestinians

Michael Young on why Jumblatt welcomed Kantar

by Sharad Venkat on July 21, 2008 in Blog, Live from Beirut

Its not because he wants a piece of the national hero pie… but that was easy to figure out. Michael Young provides an interesting analysis of why Jumblatt, leader of the PSP and the Druze, had to have Kantar over for dinner.

http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/mesh/2008/07/behind_druze_kisses_for_quntar/

The Hizbullah PR Machine, a.k.a. the Greatest Show in Lebanon

by Sharad Venkat on July 17, 2008 in Blog, Live from Beirut

Yesterday Hizbullah and Israel engaged in a very high profile prisoner swap. Hizbullah received the bodies of 199 Lebanese and Palestinian fighters, as well as 5 Lebanese who had been in Israeli prisons, for the bodies of two dead Israeli soldiers, who were snatched by Hizbullah in 2006, and which led to the 2006 war. Hizbullah held a massive rally in their stronghold in Dahiye in Beirut to welcome the prisoners back. I covered it as press and it was an incredible spectacle…

A crowd fit for a world cup football match packed into dahiye yesterday to welcome home their freed heroes and celebrate hizbullahs latest self-declared victory. Thousands upon thousands cheered amid a landscape of resistance flags- the color of the night was yellow but sprinkled in were Lebanese flags, as well as those bearing the insignias of AMAL and the SSNP sickle and hammer. Buildings framed al-Raya stadium on all sides, and each one filled with people standing on their balconies, waving flags and taking in this spectacle that seemed to be half rock concert and half coronation. Read more

To Bomb or Not to Bomb

by Sharad Venkat on July 6, 2008 in Blog, Live from Beirut

After nine straight days of drinking to fulfill a wide range of social obligations, I’ve decided to give up the bottle for at least three days in order to fulfill a personal obligation to my health and well being (and my wallet! Thanks for nothing Summer Internship Fund:)

Anyway, there’s been a good deal of talk for a while now about what’s going to happen next in the game of brinksman ship being played between Israel, Iran and the US. Rami Khoury, the editor emeritus of the Daily Star, recently published an op-ed saying that though the desire is strong for an attack on Iranian nuclear facilities, such a move lacks the long term strategic cost-benefit ratio needed to put the no doubt complex and detailed military plans into motion. Rami Khoury’s article can be found here. Read more

Political Speed Dating

by Sharad Venkat on July 3, 2008 in Blog, Live from Beirut

This is an article I wrote a few weeks ago for the Daily Star newspaper. Its a reflection piece looking back on the Harvard Lebanon immersion Trip that started it all.

As I looked out into the night from the balcony of the Kataeb compound in Saifi, the lights of the houses glittered on the distant hills outside of Beirut. Waiting with 39 other Harvard students for former President Amin Gemayel to usher us into the conference room, I thought of something a friend told me a day earlier, itself a popular repetition of Beirut’s contradictory reputation. To paraphrase, he said “Beirut pulls you in with its beautiful landscapes, its rich history, its ceaseless nightlife, its stunning and enigmatic women…and then when you have let Beirut enter you, when you have let yourself sink into its welcoming earth, it will explode. Beirut will take your blood to feed the constantly spinning cycle of violence, as payment for taking in its riches, or perhaps as punishment for believing that what you had fallen in love with was the reality.” Read more

Looking thru a Broken Windshield

by Sharad Venkat on July 2, 2008 in Blog, Live from Beirut

The other night, I had a few drinks with a friend. On the walk home, he stopped by a red Hundai. “See this car?” he asked. “It’s been sitting here untouched since the last war.”

The next day I thought about the car and went back to take another look in the daylight. It is in relatively good shape except the back window is completely smashed. The front windshield has a bullet hole near the top. I imagined I was a crime scene specialist on CSI and after closer inspection, determined that a bullet had come in through the back and exited through the front windshield. It came in through the back because the glass from the back window was mostly inside the car, indicating the force came from the outside and in through the back. This was a pretty rudimentary analysis, but I was happy with it. I was more interested in the story behind this car. Why was it still sitting here? What did it mean? Read more